On a fateful
day in 1922 Canadian nurse Rene Caisse happened to notice some scar tissue on
the breast of an elderly English woman. The woman said that doctors had
diagnosed her with breast cancer years before. However, the woman didn't
want to risk surgery nor did she have the money for it.

The English woman had met an old
Indian medicine man in the 1890s who told her that he could cure her cancer with an herbal
tea. The woman took the medicine man's advice, and consequently she was
still alive nearly thirty years later to pass on this herbal remedy to Nurse Caisse.

About a year
later, Rene Caisse was walking beside a retired doctor who pointed to a common
weed and stated: "Nurse Caisse, if people would use this weed there
would be little cancer in the world." Rene later stated: "He
told me the name of the plant. It was one of the herbs my patient named
as an ingredient of the Indian medicine man's tea!" [I
Was Canada's Cancer Nurse] The "weed" was
sheep sorrel.
In a 1974 letter to Dr. Chester Stock of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Institute, Rene Caisse stated: "Who in the
world would ever think to find a solution to cancer in a common meadow?"
[THE ESSENCE OF ESSIAC, p. 127]

In 1924 she
decided to test the tea on her aunt who had cancer of the stomach and was
given about six months to live. Her aunt lived for another 21 years,
cancer free.

Rene Caisse
(pronounced "Reen Case") later gave the tea to her 72-year old mother who was
diagnosed with inoperable cancer of the liver, with only days to live.
Her mother recovered and lived without cancer for another 18 years.

In the
ensuing years Nurse Caisse refined and perfected the original "medicine man's"
formula. She tested various herbal combinations on laboratory mice and on human cancer patients.
She eventually reduced the tea to four herbs: burdock root,
sheep sorrel
(whole herb including the roots),
slippery elm and Turkey rhubarb. She called the formula Essiac, which is
her surname spelled backwards. [Read "I
Was Canada's Cancer Nurse" for more details.]

Rene Caisse
devoted over fifty years of her life to treating hundreds of cancer patients
with Essiac. So effective were her treatments that in 1938 her
supporters gathered 55,000 signatures for a petition, amongst other petitions,
to allow Rene Caisse to continue treating cancer patients. A bill was
introduced in the Ontario
legislature to (allegedly) "authorise Rene Caisse to practice medicine in the Province of
Ontario in the treatment of cancer and conditions therein". Due to the machinations of the
medical establishment, the bill failed
to pass by just three votes.

However, Rene Caisse made her views known regarding
this bill which would set up the "Royal Cancer Commission" to investigate all possible cancer
cures. She told the press: "The people of Ontario will be paying a
group of men to develop something that was developed and
discovered 15 years ago. I have developed and proven a cure right here
in Bracebridge, and I am running a clinic where hundreds of cancer sufferers
are being treated and helped. Why then should I be asked to give my
formula over to a group of doctors who never did anything to earn it?" [CALLING
OF AN ANGEL, p. 59.]

WHAT DID DOCTORS SAY ABOUT RENE CAISSE'S TEA?

Rene Caisse operated her cancer clinic
under the supervision and observation of a number of doctors.
Based on what those doctors saw with their own eyes, eight of them signed a
petition to the Department of National Health and Welfare at Ottawa, asking
that Nurse Caisse be given facilities to do independent research on her
discovery. Their petition, dated at Toronto on October 27, 1926, read
as follows:

To Whom It May Concern:

"We the undersigned believe
that the 'Treatment for Cancer' given by Nurse R.M. Caisse can do no harm and
that it relieves pain, will reduce the enlargement and will prolong life in
hopeless cases. To the best of our knowledge, she has not been given a case to
treat until everything in medical and surgical science has been tried without
effect and even then she was able to show remarkable beneficial results on those
cases at that late stage.

"We would be interested to
see her given an opportunity to prove her work in a large way. To the best
of our knowledge she has treated all cases free of any charge and has been
carrying on this work over the period of the past two years."

Initially,
Rene was not aware of the control that the medical/pharmaceutical
establishment had over governments. After the petition was delivered to
the National Health and Welfare Department, she was continually threatened with
arrest until she finally withdrew from public view. Unlike Nurse Caisse,
the medical establishment was more interested in making money than in helping
people. Essiac was cheap. It could cut into the lucrative profits
from radiation, chemotherapy and surgery--treatments that often do more harm
than good. Essiac is non-toxic. Rene said, "Chemotherapy should be
a criminal offense."

The story of Rene Caisse's struggle to make Essiac an official cancer treatment
was told by Dr. Gary Glum in his book CALLING OF AN ANGEL: ESSIAC,
NATURE'S CURE FOR CANCER. In a telephone conversation Dr. Glum stated that people who
take Essiac on a regular, preventive basis do not get cancer. Dr. Glum
interviewed JFK's personal physician, Dr. Charles Brusch, who stated: "I
know Essiac has curing potential. It can lessen the condition of the
individual, control it, and it can cure it." [CALLING
OF AN ANGEL, p. 168.]

Dr. Ralph
Moss was appointed to the Cancer Advisory Panel that evaluates alternative
cancer therapies for the government. On his original web site and in his book
CANCER THERAPY, Dr. Moss
pointed out that each of the herbs in Essiac has been
scientifically shown to contain anticancer substances. In his "Cancer
Chronicles" Dr. Moss noted Essiac's rising
popularity by comparing Essiac's low cost to a $150,000 bone
marrow transplant. Dr. Ralph Moss has written several books on
complementary and alternative cancer treatments and the cancer industry
including his book "Questioning Chemotherapy".

ESSIAC--MORE
THAN JUST A CANCER TREATMENT

Dr. Frederick
Banting, the co-discoverer of insulin became interested in Essiac and even
offered Nurse Caisse research facilities to test it. According to Rene,
Dr. Banting stated that "Essiac must actuate the pancreatic gland into normal
functioning". Even today diabetics are using Essiac to improve their
condition and many have gone off insulin entirely. (For more information
on diabetes and Essiac read the
Dr. Marijah McCain interview.)

Essiac has become widely known for its
remarkable ability to boost the immune system and detoxify the body.
Many people who drink Essiac tea regularly report feeling healthier with less
incidence of colds and flu.
Burdock, for example, has a well-established reputation for detoxification and support of
the liver and organs of elimination. To read
about additional benefits of Essiac, CLICK HERE to read the interview with
Dr. Marijah McCain.

BURDOCK ROOT

(Arctium
lappa)

For centuries
burdock root has been regarded as
an effective blood purifier that neutralizes
and eliminates poisons from the body. Burdock contains a volatile
oil--especially in the seeds--that is eliminated through the sweat glands,
taking toxins with it and alleviating skin problems. Burdock contains
niacin, which is known to eliminate poisons from the body, including
radiation. Burdock also supports the bladder, kidney and liver and has
been said to dissolve kidney stones. It also contains an abundance of
minerals, particularly iron. Studies have shown anti-tumor activity in
burdock. Japanese scientists have isolated an antimutagenic property in
burdock, which they call the "B factor". The Japanese grow burdock root
for food as well as medicine. A memorandum from the World Health
Organization revealed that burdock was active against HIV. Extracts of
burdock seed have demonstrated potent anti-cancer action against leukemia
[HERBAL MEDICINE, HEALING & CANCER by Donald Yance]. Burdock is also
a component in the Hoxsey herbal cancer treatment.

Dr. Ralph Moss points out that sheep sorrel contains aloe emodin,
a natural substance that shows significant anti-leukemic activity. Sheep
sorrel contains antioxidants, is diuretic and has been used to check
hemorrhages. Sheep sorrel is a traditional food of native cultures and
is still served in fine restaurants along with other sorrels.
CLICK HERE for more information about sheep
sorrel.

SLIPPERY ELM

(Ulmus rubra/fulva)

The
inner bark of the slippery elm
tree is well-known for its soothing and healing properties. It reduces inflammations such
as sore throat, diarrhea and urinary problems. It has been regarded as
both a food and medicine. Dr. Moss noted that "slippery elm contains
beta-sitosterol and a polysaccharide, both of which have shown [anti-cancer]
activity." [CANCER THERAPY, p. 147]

TURKEY
RHUBARB ROOT

(Rheum
palmatum tanguticum)

Turkey
Rhubarb has been shown to have anti-tumor activity. It is diuretic,
anti-inflammatory, anti-bacterial
and has been used extensively to relieve constipation. It is medicinally
more potent than garden rhubarb root and is more palatable.
CLICK HERE for more
information about the rhubarb root in Essiac tea.

CAVEAT EMPTOR*

Due to the
ever-increasing popularity of Essiac, numerous entrepreneurs have jumped on
the Essiac bandwagon with their own four, six, or eight-herb products.
Unfortunately, Rene Caisse was very secretive. She never published the formula and it appears that she
experimented with different herbal combinations. Therefore, it is
understandable that there would be controversies over who has the correct formula or the best
product. Curiously, ESSIAC didn't become a trademark name until two
years after Dr. Glum published the Essiac recipe. Yellow dock or garden
sorrel is sometimes
substituted for sheep sorrel. Imported turkey rhubarb may be
irradiated, fumigated or both. So how do you know if you are buying the
real, unaltered Essiac?

Many people become confused about Essiac tea
after visiting various web sites with conflicting information.
Unfortunately, Rene is not alive today to remind people that it's all about "helping suffering humanity", not
money. As Rene stated in "I Was Canada's Cancer Nurse", "respect and
love of our fellow man are more important than riches." Sheila Snow,
author of THE ESSENCE OF ESSIAC
and co-author of ESSIAC ESSENTIALS and ESSIAC, THE
SECRETS OF RENE CAISSE'S HERBAL PHARMACY, knew
Rene Caisse personally and fortunately obtained a great deal of
documentation to dispel much of the confusion about Essiac tea. Sheila
Snow has passed on the Sheila Snow Essiac archive collection to Mali Klein, author of
THE ESSIAC BOOK.

Essiac is
truly a multi-cultural phenomenon. So here are the plain, non-commercial
facts:

1) Essiac marketers often claim that Essiac
is an Ojibwa Indian formula. In "I Was Canada's Cancer Nurse" Rene Caisse
referred only to "a very old Indian medicine man" without naming any specific
tribe. Sheila Snow and Mali Klein have researched this issue extensively
from the Essiac Archives and found that "There is absolutely no evidence to
support the popular assumption that he was a member of the Ojibwa tribe.
There were six different tribes living in Northern Ontario at that time,
including Algonquin [Anishinabeg],
Cree, Cherokee, Huron, Iroquois and Ojibwa as well as the refugees from other
tribes in the United States, who were fleeing north of the border from the
Indian wars."

2) Turkey
rhubarb (Rheum palmatum) is native to China and Tibet, not northern Ontario, so it
appears unlikely that it was a
part of the original medicine man's formula of indigenous herbs in the late
1800s. Even today turkey
rhubarb has still not established itself as a wild herb of North America
[North America was originally called Turtle Island before the European
Invasion and subsequent Holocaust]. "The [Turkey] rhubarb
rhizome official in the British Pharmacopoeia, 1914, must be collected in
China and Thibet. English-grown rhubarb is inferior to the official
rhubarb in medicinal qualities."* Even the 1931 edition of A MODERN
HERBAL reports that "We still depend upon Northern China and Thibet for
Rhubarb."* In Rene's Caisse's "I
Was Canada's Cancer Nurse" she stated that the original formula came from an "old Indian [who] showed her certain
herbs growing...in the the wilds of Northern Ontario." Nurse Caisse also used "Rheum officinale"
which is often called "Indian rhubarb" because it came from Asia by way of the
trade route through India. However, according to Mary McPherson,
"Turkish is better" and Rene Caisse switched to Turkey rhubarb because it
tastes better.
CLICK HERE for more
information about "Turkey rhubarb" and "Indian rhubarb".

Since
the modern North American diet of over-processed foods can cause chronic
constipation which can promote cancer, the addition of rhubarb root in the
formula appears to have been a wise one. Herbalists
such as Dr. John Christopher and Dr. Bernard Jensen believed that most illnesses are due to unclean colons.
Turkey rhubarb is now being grown commercially in North America, and that may
very well be due to the ever-increasing popularity of Essiac tea.

[IMPORTANT NOTE: It should be noted that
Essiac tea is a mild colon cleanser. In severe cases of constipation and
when doing a thorough colon cleanse for serious illnesses other herbs are
traditionally used such as cascara sagrada, senna, aloe, ginger, cayenne and
garlic. These herbs are often taken in conjunction with a formulation containing clay,
charcoal, psyllium seeds, flax seeds, apple pectin, marshmallow root, fennel
seed and slippery elm bark in conjunction with colon hydrotherapy. One
source for such products is herbalist Dr. Richard Schultze, who received herbal
training under both Dr. Christopher and Dr. Jensen.]

3) Burdock and sheep sorrel are not native
to North America. It appears that both burdock and sheep sorrel were
brought to this continent from Europe by early settlers who then passed on
their knowledge of these two herbs to the local tribes. Burdock and
sheep sorrel eventually spread throughout North America where water was
sufficient. Unfortunately, they are often referred to as invasive
"weeds". Rene Caisse indicated that sheep sorrel was one of the original
herbs, so it appears that sheep sorrel had migrated to "the wilds of Northern
Ontario" before the 1890s. Burdock could have also established itself in
Northern Ontario by then.

4) Slippery elm is
the only Essiac herb native to North America.

In spite of the numerous, conflicting claims
as to what the original Indian "medicine" man's formula was, no one has yet
offered any verifiable evidence to settle that issue. Some claim it was
a four-herb formula while others claim it was an eight-herb, six or seven-herb
formula. Many of these claims state that turkey rhubarb was one of the original herbs,
which did not grow "in the wilds of Northern Ontario".
Rene Caisse did experiment with a number of herbs and changed the formula
through time. It does appear that she gave different Essiac tea formulas
to different people to try to find the best one. She also appeared to
"thrive on intrigue" to throw people off the trail to guard her secrets.
[See THE ESSIAC BOOK by
Mali Klein]. Therefore, it is easy to see why so many
people are marketing different versions of "Essiac" tea, all claiming to
have the right one. However, she finally settled on her four-herb
formula before she died. This four-herb formula was demonstrated by Rene Caisse and untold cancer
patients
to be an effective, health-giving remedy that has stood the test of time .

The only
person Rene Caisse trusted to help her make Essiac tea was her best friend, Mary
McPherson. Mary had worked alongside Rene since the 1930s and knew the
formula by heart. According to Dr. Gary Glum, Mary had promised Rene
never to reveal the formula to anyone. The Essiac formula might never
have made it into the public domain had it not been for Dr. Glum. In
1985 he
purchased the formula for $120,000 from one of Rene's former patients.

Dr. Glum could have kept the formula secret and become very wealthy selling
bottles of Essiac. However, he unselfishly released the formula into the
public domain in 1988. At first he offered the formula on a video tape
that he advertised in his book, CALLING OF
AN ANGEL, but the feds unlawfully seized the tapes before he could sell
very many of them. Dr. Glum gave out the Essiac formula and recipe free of
charge to anyone who mailed him a request for the Essiac formula.

When Dr. Glum met Mary McPherson in Bracebridge,
Ontario and told her what the Essiac formula was, she was more than a little surprised.
According to Dr. Glum, Mary eventually revealed the formula in 1994 because it
was no longer a secret, and she wanted to end the controversy over the Essiac
formula before she died. Therefore, on December 23, 1994 the "Essiac"
formula & recipe was officially entered into the public domain with the
recording of Mary McPherson's affidavit.

In "I
Was Canada's Canada Nurse" Rene Caisse stated one reason why she wanted to
keep the formula secret: "I wanted to establish my remedy, which I
called ESSIAC or my name spelled backward, in actual practice and not in a
laboratory only. I knew it had no bad side affects, so it could do no
harm. I wanted to use it on patients in my own way. And when the
time came, I wanted to share in the administration of my own discovery."

Another
reason why Rene kept the Essiac formula secret was that she didn't trust people
to make it properly and she thought that it would be altered. For example,
several years after Dr. Gary Glum published the four-herb Essiac formula, Canadian talk show host Elaine Alexander marketed
an eight-herb formula, which included the four herbs that Dr. Glum published.
Her marketing campaign proclaimed that Essiac's "new name was Flor•Essence®". She subsequently died of
cancer. Even today a common misconception still exists that Elaine
Alexander's formula is Rene Caisse's authentic Essiac formula.
However, Mary McPherson's recorded
affidavit settled that controversy in 1994. This eight-herb formula
is actually Dr. Charles
Brusch's own formula, not Rene Caisse's Essiac formula. Two of the
herbs in this eight-herb formula were blessed thistle and kelp. Rene
Caisse never used these two herbs.

Furthermore,
it appears that there were unethical activities made
in the marketing of Elaine Alexander's and Dr. Brusch's formula. Claims were made that
Dr. Charles Brusch knew the formula. However, researchers Sheila Snow
and Mali Klein stated in their book THE SECRETS OF RENE CAISSE'S HERBAL PHARMACY (p. 13): "Considering
Sheila's 16 years' association with Dr Brusch and his wife, and examining the
evidence of the letters exchanged between them and with Mary McPherson, we
must conclude that we do not believe that Rene ever gave Dr Brusch the Essiac
formula. Therefore we must question any subsequent claims by people
associated with Dr Brusch as having access to the original Essiac formula."
Rene Caisse told Sheila Snow on July 11, 1977: "I didn't give it [the Essiac formula] to
Doctor Brusch and I'm not giving it to anyone else." [THE
ESSIAC BOOK, p. 74] It also appears that Dr. Brusch's name was forged on false documents.
Dr. Brusch's wife, Jane, stated: "I
am infuriated over all the different things I am hearing. I can't
believe that so many people are using Charlie's name and the things they are
coming up with -- old signatures etc -- requests for peoples' records and
histories -- all lies. I turn all these over to our lawyer -- I am
dumbfounded." CLICK HERE
for
more information about this situation.

Rene Caisse did pass on different versions of the
Essiac formula to at least four people before she died in 1978.
CLICK HERE to read "Who
Owns Essiac?" for more information about the history of Essiac and
Essiac timeline.

Every herbal formula has its own
synergy and therefore creates a specific effect. Rene Caisse spent her
life refining the formula with her hands-on research. No one else has
done such extensive research on Essiac tea. The formula below was the
final formula that she settled on after more than fifty years of experimentation and
research with real cancer patients. Rene Caisse stated: "If it works, don't change it." [ESSIAC
ESSENTIALS, p. 84]

"Now, like Grandma
Moses, I paint pictures. Many, many oil paintings, trying to forget that
which I know I can never forget--that I know a cure for cancer, and that I can
never give it to the world, and must each day see the misery of the patients."
[Rene Caisse quote from I
Was Canada's Cancer Nurse. The painting on the right was painted
by Rene Caisse. CLICK HERE
to view more of Rene's paintings.]

Mix these ingredients thoroughly and store in glass jar in dark dry cupboard.

Take a measuring cup, use 1 ounce of herb mixture to 32 ounces of water
depending on the amount you want to make.

I use 1 cup of mixture to 8 x 32 = 256 ounces of water. Boil hard for 10
minutes (covered) then turn off heat but leave sitting on warm plate over night
(covered).

In the morning heat steaming hot and let settle a few minutes, then strain
through fine strainer into hot sterilized bottles and sit to cool. Store in
dark cool cupboard. Must be refrigerated when opened. When near the last when
its thick pour in a large jar and sit in frig overnight then pour off all you
[can] without sediment.

The
preparation of Essiac is as important as the formula itself. Essiac is a
decoction, not an infusion. An infusion is what people make when they put
a tea bag in a cup of hot water. Generally speaking, an infusion tends
to extract vitamins and volatile oils from leaves and flowers. A decoction is used to extract
minerals, bitter components, etc. from hard materials such as roots, bark or seeds by boiling for
a few minutes and then
allowing the herbs to steep for several hours. Entrepreneurs often sell Essiac imitations in tincture form (herbs in alcohol) or in gelatin capsules;
neither form is Essiac because Essiac is a tea and, more specifically, a decoction
that must be made in a certain way in order to achieve the kind of results
that Nurse Caisse was demonstrating. Rene Caisse did not administer
Essiac herbs in capsules nor did she make it as a tincture.

People often substitute
stainless steel for an enameled pot and lid. The main concern is not to
use an aluminum pot. Also, be sure not to use unfiltered,
chlorinated water. The formula above can be reduced to 1/2 cup of herb
mix to one gallon of water. [Optional: Dr. Glum suggests
adding 2 or 3 cups of extra water to replace water lost through evaporation
during boiling. Also, the dry herbs will absorb water as well.]
After boiling for ten minutes, let the tea steep about 12 hours. Then
heat up tea to steaming, but not boiling. (Do not boil twice.) The
remaining pulp can be used for healing poultices.

Don't use cheese cloth to strain Essiac.
Likewise, do not use a kitchen sieve that has a very fine mesh as this may
filter out the slippery elm. Slippery elm gives the tea a slight viscous consistency when poured. If you do not notice this
"slippery" consistency after refrigerating your tea, you may be using a sieve that is too
fine. Don't worry about herb
particles in your Essiac; they will settle to the bottom of the jars.
Some people drink the Essiac dregs (particles that settle on the bottom), others don't. Some people give the Essiac dregs to their pets or farm animals as a health food. Many people have reported
the same or similar health benefits with their pets that humans are reporting.
The dregs can also be used topically as a poultice.

It is best to
refrigerate the Essiac tea as soon as it has cooled. Discard the tea if mold appears on the surface or if
the tea does
not taste right. CLICK HERE to
learn about dosage.

Make sure
that the sheep sorrel you use is the small, wild variety of sheep sorrel and
not a substitute like yellow dock or garden (French) sorrel. Imported
turkey rhubarb root could be fumigated or irradiated. Many Essiac merchants are unaware of the quality of their herbs. The best way
to insure that you're getting true Essiac is to grow the herbs yourself.
This puts you in control of product quality and takes out the commercialism.
Burdock root is harvested in the fall of the first year. Slippery elm
bark is wildcrafted or organically-grown and is easy to buy. Turkey Rhubarb is the only herb in
Essiac that cannot be wildcrafted in the US. The Chinese use six year
old turkey rhubarb roots for maximum potency.

*Quotes about Turkey rhubarb are from A MODERN HERBAL,
first published by Jonathan Cape, 1931

The Essiac tea in the snow on a foggy January morning (picture above left) was made using the Essiac formula given above.
Compare the tea color in this picture to the tea that Rene Caisse herself
holds in her hand in this YouTube video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_k_nW-b-XmQ.

"We all have the right to benefit
from Essiac because no one can stop us making it, no one can stop us taking it
and no one can stop us deciding how and when we're going to do it." [THE ESSIAC BOOK
by Mali Klein, 2006]

During times of universal deceit,
telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act.

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